October 13, 2017 / Modified oct 13, 2017 3:18 p.m.

A 1960s Documentary Hidden for Decades - Now Revealed in Tucson.

Also on Arizona Spotlight: Should honorably discharged veterans be able to get their citizenship and military benefits restored after trouble with the law? And, a local artist's adventures canoeing with alligators in a Florida river.

Off the Street 1 A student who took part in the revolutionary 1968 summer art program depicted in the documentary "Off the Street".
courtesy Hanson Film Institute

Featured on the October 13th, 2017 edition of ARIZONA SPOTLIGHT with host Mark McLemore:

  • Nancy Montoya looks into the details of a new bill intended to return citizenship and military benefits to honorably discharged veterans who have been deported or had their green cards revoked because of trouble with the law...


alligator and armored catfish unsized VIEW LARGER
Susan Faulkner Davis
  • Learn about the Tucson premiere of a documentary film that has been unseen since it was made in 1968. Off the Street tells how a group of ethnically diverse New York teens were given a chance to leave the city for a summer, to take intensive art classes surrounded by nature at the Vermont Academy. Mark talks with filmmaker Jere Michael, now an Arizona retiree, and Bernard Stanley Hoyes, one of the kids in the program who today has a career as a fine art painter...


The Hanson Film Institute presents the world premiere of Off the Street on Tuesday, October 17, 2017 at the Center for Creative Photography on the U of A campus. Doors open at 5 pm. The half-hour film will be followed by Q&A and a panel conversation, featuring Jere Michael & Bernard Stanley Hoyes. The event is free, but seating is limited.

Off the Street spot An example of painting done by a student in 1968 as part of the project documented in "Off the Street".
courtesy Hanson Film Institute


Arizona Spotlight
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